Don't drive. However if I did I think I most likely would fear driving in the rain. I would be concerned for how well I could see when its raining. Especially if its raining hard.
Well, not really. But I like to avoid driving in the rain, especially when it's dark. The roads in my state are terrible. Nobody takes care of them. You know the lines on the roads, like the double yellow lines and the white dotted lines separating the lanes? Well, they're faded. Nobody repaints them. Many roads don't even have the reflectors on the yellow lines. They're already hard to see when it's not raining, but it's harder to see them in the rain. When it's dark and it's raining.......geez, you can't see them at all! And, it's made worse by the headlights and the traffic lights reflecting off of the wet pavement. You know how many accidents I almost got into because I didn't know I was swerving into someone else's lane?? I'm not the only one that complains. Everyone I know has a hard time driving in the rain here because they can't see the lines on the roads. Will the state do anything about it? No!
It's the other drivers that are speeding in the rain that scare me. I'm not going to die yt just because some idiot doesn't know what driving in the rain means.
Pay attention, and in some cases, let god drive for you. This is the reason that I have driven through at least 3, if not more, tornadoes and several flash flooding.
I hate to drive in the rain. Here we get torrential downpours that are blinding. It is very frightening to suddenly have no visibility at the same time the streets start flooding.
Generally speaking, no the rain doesn't bother me, it's others that drive like lunatics. Tailgating and speeding will get you killed on dry pavement. Water on the pavement increases the dangers.
I've been caught up in flash floods twice before. It's no fun at 3a.m. when you don't see it coming. I was very lucky both times.
I've been caught up in flash floods twice before. It's no fun at 3a.m. when you don't see it coming. I was very lucky both times.
But when it starts flooding ... now that becomes scary.